Frontier Primary School Yearbook Exclusive !!hot!! Page

“Everyone talks about the ‘real world,’” says Margaret “Midge” Hollander, 13, the yearbook’s editor-in-chief, wielding a pair of safety scissors like a scepter. “But here, the yearbook is the real world.”

The school pride section showcases national and individual honors: Frontier Primary School - MOE Heritage Centre

“We sign them,” Priya explains, holding a glitter gel pen. “But we don’t write ‘Have a great summer.’ We write ‘Don’t forget the Northern Lights.’ Or ‘I saved you a seat on the bus.’”

Highlighting community service initiatives and daily acts of kindness. Behind the Scenes: The Making of the Yearbook frontier primary school yearbook exclusive

: Highlights from the "Celebrating Our Grands" initiative where students created crafts for their elders. Award-Winning Excellence

A rigorous editing process ensures every student's name is spelled correctly and every memory is accurately preserved. 🚀 Looking Ahead

In three pages of elegant, cursive script, Mr. Vance describes the school as a living organism. He writes about the pencil marks on the doorframe of Room 12 (measuring the growth of 1,200 children over 50 years). He recounts the night the boiler exploded in 1985 and how teachers formed a human chain to carry sleeping kindergarteners to the gym. He ends with a sentence that has become the motto of this year’s edition: “A school is not a building. It is a pile of stories that refuse to die.” Behind the Scenes: The Making of the Yearbook

Using professional design software, students learn the fundamentals of typography, grid systems, and visual balance.

In a touching display of gratitude, the yearbook committee included a special "Behind the Scenes Heroes" feature. This section shines a light on the administrative staff, custodians, cafeteria workers, and support educators who keep Frontier Primary running smoothly every day. Accompanied by short, heartwarming quotes from students, this tribute underscores the tight-knit nature of the school community.

Perhaps the most beloved feature of this exclusive is the foreword. It is not written by the principal, the valedictorian, or the mayor. It is written by Mr. Harold Vance, the school’s 74-year-old janitor who has worked at Frontier Primary since the day it opened. Vance describes the school as a living organism

Behind the Pages: A Frontier Primary School Yearbook Exclusive

If you want to experience the for yourself, you have three options, none of them easy:

Tributes to educators who have received the Caring Teacher Award and National Day Commendation Awards.